177902

Springer, Dordrecht

1988

420 Pages

ISBN 978-94-010-8290-7

Synthese Library
vol. 194

Perspectives on mind

Edited by

Herbert Otto, James Tuedio

Phenomenology and analytic philosophy have skirmished often, but seldom in ways conducive to dialectical progress. Generally, the skirmishes seem more "political" than philosophical, as when one side ridicules the methods of the other or criticizes the viability of the other's issues and assump­ tions. Analytic interest in third person objectivity is often spurned by Continental philosophers as being unduly abstract. Continental interest in first person subjectivity is often criticized by analysts as being muddled and imprecise. Logical analysis confronts thepower of metaphor and judges it "too ambiguous" for rigorous philosophical activity. The language of metaphor confronts the power of logical analysis and deems it "too restric­ tive" for describing the nature and structures of authentic human exper­ ience. But are the two approaches really incompatible? Perhaps because each side of the "divide" has been working at problems largely uninteresting to the "opposition" it has been easy to ignore or underestimate the importance of this issue. But now each side is being led into a common field of problems associated with the nature of mind, and there is a new urgency to the need for examining carefully the question of conceptual compatibility and the potential for dialogue. Analytic thinkers are typically in the business of concept clarification and objective certi­ fication. Continental philosophers employ introspection in the interest of a project of description and classification that aims to be true to the full subtlety and complexity of the human condition.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-4033-8

Full citation:

Otto, H. , Tuedio, J. (eds) (1988). Perspectives on mind, Springer, Dordrecht.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Otto Herbert; Tuedio James

1-2

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Rey cogitans

Smith David Woodruff

25-34

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Psychophysical correspondence

Williams Forrest

49-56

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Meaning and mental representation

Emmett Kathleen

77-84

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Husserl's epiphenomenology

Dreyfus Hubert L

85-104

Testing robots for qualia

Moor James H.

107-118

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Animals, qualia, and robots

Johnstone Henry W.

127-136

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Mechanism and intentionality

Nelson Raymond J.

137-158

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Knotty, knotty

Bender John W.

159-168

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Sophist vs skeptic

Fuller Steve

199-208

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Schemas, cognition and language

Arbib Michael A.

219-238

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Objects and fields

Richardson Robert C.

283-292

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Meaning making

Otto Herbert

293-314

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Comments on Otto on translation

Hendry Herbert E.

315-324

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Blindness to silence

Fuller Steve

325-338

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The soft impeachment

Sleeper R. W.

355-364

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In defense of pluralism

Munz James

365-370

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Toward a new agenda for the philosophy of mind

Otto Herbert; Tuedio James

371-376

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